Tracker winner

It has not been worth the effort, or the cost. The simplest investment, £30,000 invested in the accumulation units of an index-tracking fund on the day we started the Nifty Thrifty portfolio, is winning. Today, the notional value of the Nifty Thrifty has grown 83% to £54,151, an annualised return of about 7%. An investment in the index tracking fund over the same period would be worth £57,121 today, a gain of about 90% with an annualised return of just over 7%.

This, I am afraid, is capitulation. We have taken the decision to stop what has proved to be a marginally losing strategy. Just so you can see how the last cohort of stocks has performed, the table shows them immediately prior to liquidation.

Our original expectation was that the Nifty Thrifty would do badly some years, but substantially better than an index tracking fund over the long term. We thought we might give it a decade to prove itself, but I cannot face the drudgery of running the algorithm, compiling the tables, accounting for the trades and writing the same article in a year’s time. The Nifty Thrifty might stage a miraculous recovery in the year we have robbed it of, but given the first nine years, I doubt that would give us the confidence to stick with it for another 10.

What went wrong?

Now for the difficult bit. What went wrong, and what can we learn?

There are no easy answers. The algorithm, which seeks out good businesses at cheap prices, had a good pedigree. It was based on two well-tested financial strategies – Joel Greenblatt’s Magic Formula, which ranks shares according to their profitability and value, and Piotroski’s F_Score, which weeds out firms with deteriorating financials. We drip-fed the money into the market in four quarterly chunks to avoid putting it all at risk at the same time.

So why did it fare badly? The answer may lie in a comparison with a clone of the Nifty Thrifty tracked by our data provider Stockopedia. Stockopedia’s Nifty Thrifty is doing better than the original, having grown nearly 150% since 2012 and produced an annualised return of 12%. It is one of the better-performing of 66 algorithms tracked by the site, although its performance is some way behind the best.

The Stockopedia version has a different start date, it tracks a slightly smaller portfolio of 25 shares, and trades them every quarter rather than once a year. Stockopedia has not meddled with the formula in the expectation of improving it. I, on the other hand, have tweaked it a number of times, albeit sometimes out of necessity because until Stockopedia came along, a few years after we started, the data I had could not reproduce the strategy as faithfully.

Nifty Thrifty was a losing strategy

Slave to the algorithm

You can follow Stockopedia’s Nifty Thrifty performance using this link: bit.ly/NiftyThrifty, but note Stockopedia’s performance figures do not benefit from dividends and neither are they hindered by trading costs and stamp duty.

I will probably take an occasional interest in Stockopedia’s version of the Nifty Thrifty; but I am unlikely to invest in it because I have learned something – and it is not about algorithmic investing, it is about me.

My interest in shares stems from a fascination with business and the wheels of capitalism. Slavishly following an algorithm has not taught me anything about the companies it selects, and it did not bring me much joy even when I thought it might do well.

A final insult: liquidating the portfolio costs money, £10 in broker fees for each share, which is £300 in total and leaves us with £53,851.

An annualised 7% return was a marginal loss against an index tracking fund

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